In the Lab of Luxury

ROXANNE VARZA pushes open a door covered in Ken dolls, lures me into the men’s room, and begins knocking on stalls, looking for a vacant one. “Here,” she says on a third try. “Open it.” In contrast to the gray, antiseptic bathroom, the stall is an opulent oasis, as if Alexander McQueen had designed an outhouse. Varza pierced the stunned silence: “This startup is called Trone. We do things very differently here.”

Such is Station F, where Varza is director. It’s the world’s largest tech incubator, housed in an 111,550-square-foot converted Parisian freight train station that’s as long as the Eiffel Tower is high. It opened in June 2017 with 1,000 founders and uncanny timing: That same month, President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a new tech visa program and a mission to make France “a startup nation.”

While Station F hosts Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Microsoft, those blue chips are boilerplate behemoths on tech campuses these days. Much more interesting is the presence of two French megabrands: L’Oréal, the cosmetics giant, and LVMH, the umbrella group covering Louis Vuitton, Givenchy, Hennessy, Sephora, TAG Heuer, and many more.

A lavish lavatory from Trone.

Courtesy of Trone

L’Oréal, which made its first ever tech acquisition in March, runs a Station F atelier of nine beauty-oriented startups. Down the hall, LVMH’s venture—La Maison des Startups—has 89 workstations for 23 startups (50 by November). These are not Facebook killers. But while these burgeoning firms are unlikely to change tech financially, interviews with more than a dozen of them suggest something bolder: the ability to revolutionize tech tonally.

“The Internet is democratic and open, but that means there’s a lot of uniformity,” says Cyrus Farivar, author of The Internet of Elsewhere. “There’s a reason Skype came out of Estonia or competitive gaming came out of South Korea. The Internet adapts to location. For luxury, that’s Paris, no competition. It makes sense that this is happening there. Where else could it? People say Dubai. Um, no.”

While many startups are dreamed up by Bay Area brogrammers as a means of easing and simplifying entitled bachelorhood, the luxury thinking of L’Oréal and LVMH suggests room beyond la vie en bros for a new digital dialect, a kind of tech couture. Instead of scale, specificity. Instead of disruption, finesse. An understanding that customers are as sophisticated as founders, and that nothing tailor-made is stuck in beta. Why move fast and break things when you can bask in refined craftsmanship? Who ever stopped to optimize the roses?

“The way we say buzz in French is faire du bruit; it means making noise,” says Isabelle Faggianelli, LVMH’s director of digital transformation, with a smirk. “Before it was ours, Zenith switched to quartz, which was the watch tech of the 1970s. Luckily someone kept all the mechanical pieces just in case. That is our thinking: to extend our traditions into this digital world. We are not obliged to tech.”

Varza flagged Devialet, the French electronics firm that sells stereos — pardon, audiophile systems — for as much as $35,000. “It’s a very French way of approaching tech,” she says.

Consider LVMH’s Euveka, for example, which replaces wooden mannequin torsos with robotics that can adapt to a client’s specific measurements. “We were amazed that in 2018 the industry standard is still wood,” says sales manager Eva Moudar. Euveka frees designers and tailors to expand their clientele to any body.

LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault inspects a Euveka mannequin.

Vincent Isore—IP3 Getty Images

Or L’Oréal’s Sillages, which sends personalized perfumes Warby Parker–style for customers to sample before deciding. As founder Maxime Garcia-Janin says, “Choosing a perfume o a piece of paper is like getting married before you kiss.” Not only does Sillages shatter the monotony of a room full of Chanel No. 5 wearers, but customers worldwide suddenly have a concierge parfumeur in Paris.

“People know they don’t really have a chauffeur just because Uber can get a 2005 Camry to pick them up,” says Farivar. “But luxury brands recognize that some customers want to feel like that.”

Some of Station F’s luxury startups address the similar cultural gap that even at upmarket websites the fingers tapping the world’s keyboards are more likely to be Cheetos-stained than manicured or white-gloved. Kronos Care, for example, smartly fills a luxury gap: despite finely-sourced materials, expert artistry, impeccable customer care, and chic packaging, once an item is purchased “the delivery experience for a $2,000 Louis Vuitton bag is the same for $10 of something you bought on eBay,” says cofounder Guillaume L’Hostis. His company gives luxury package tracking a facelift.

Of course, without Station F, L’Oréal and LVMH would not exactly operate out of garages in Sunnyvale. The companies’ combined revenues in 2017 exceeded $80 billion. And their digital presence is booming. At L’Oréal, for example, e-commerce represents 8% of overall revenue, but in China it’s 26% of sales.

For her part, Varza spent Station F’s debut year hyperaware of Silicon toxicity—misogyny at Uber, the notorious Google memo, and hate speech on Facebook and Twitter. “Who wants another Silicon Valley?” she asks. “Thank God we can be different.” For all of Silicon Valley’s range, it’s broadly a haven for naysayers who see the world as broken without them. At Station F, by contrast, where there’s a will, there’s a ouais.

A version of this article appears in the September 1, 2018 issue of Fortune with the headline “In The Lab of Luxury.”

SPONSORED FINANCIAL CONTENT

You May Like

Read More

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Sign up now to receive FORTUNE's best content, special offers, and much more.